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Teens Arrested After Police Unravel Plot To Carry Out Mass Shooting At Pasadena High School

General view of the South Pasadena High School after two students were arrested on suspicion of plotting a mass shooting at the high school, on August 19, 2014 in Pasadena, California. The violence was to have taken place at South Pasadena High School and police averted a potential mass shooting after receiving information from school officials. The two adolescents had planned to kill three staff members and as many students as possible. (MARK RALSTON/AFP/Getty Images)

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SOUTH PASADENA (CBS/AP) — Investigators acting on a tip unraveled a plot to carry out a mass shooting at a suburban Los Angeles high school, arresting a pair of students who planned to target three school staffers and kill as many people as possible, police said Tuesday.

School officials learned of the plot on Thursday and notified detectives, who began watching the 16- and 17-year-old boys and monitoring their online activity, South Pasadena Police Chief Arthur Miller said.

The pair didn’t have a date for an attack or weapons, but their online messaging included the names of three staffers to target and threats to randomly kill students, Miller said.

They were also researching automatic firearms, handguns, knives, explosives and tactical techniques, he said.

“Three or four days’ worth of surveillance on the Internet indicated that they had a very real threat,” he said. “They had a plan in mind that they were going to execute.”

The names of the teens have not been released because of their ages. Police expect to present their case to the district attorney later in the day.

Miller said police interviewed the boys and realized how cold-hearted the plot was. He provided no specifics, and officials at South Pasadena High School did not disclose details of the initial tip.

Classes start again Thursday in the quaint San Gabriel Valley suburb known for its quality schools and community involvement in education. Police plan to have a larger presence than usual on campus for the first day of school.

School cheerleaders Zoe Bullard and Leah Schexnayder, both 16, said they were frightened by news of the arrests.

“I don’t even want to go to school on Thursday, because what if something happens?” Schexnayder said.

“What if they missed a person?” Bullard asked about the police investigation.

Miller said his officers saved lives by thwarting the attack in the town of about 25,000 people about 6 miles from downtown Los Angeles.

“They were making a huge, a huge plan of a school massacre,” Miller said. “They just wanted to kill as many people as possible.”

Enough evidence was gathered to serve warrants at the boys’ homes Monday.

Police had to break into one boy’s house as he resisted and they took him into custody as he tried to run, officials said.

One boy allegedly said he had a relative with a gun that he might be able to get. Police contacted that relative, who said the weapon was secured.

The two teenage boys, who were about to become seniors, were arrested on charges of making threats and conspiracy. They were being held at a juvenile facility.

Miller didn’t provide information about the dynamic of their relationship. He said the suspects’ parents were cooperating with investigators.

The FBI joined the investigation to help search for evidence on the computers seized from the boys’ homes.

Officials must investigate all threats, and discretion comes later as they decide how to deal with students who make them, said Ken Trump, president of the consulting firm National School Safety and Security Services.

“They’re better off to find dozens of threats that are not credible than to have one case that’s missed,” he said.

In Trump’s opinion, based on information police have released, the South Pasadena threat was reasonably well-developed.